Rodney Barnes Readies the Next Phase of Killadelphia’s Supernatural War

Rodney Barnes talks his horror comic series, Killadelphia, and the big guest stars appearing in the next arc; Spawn, the Savage Dragon, and Blacula.

 

Writer Rodney Barnes and artist Jason Shawn Alexander’s creator-owned Image horror comic series Killadelphia started off as a tale of father and son cops investigating murders on the streets of Philadelphia that were being carried out by a vampire army led by American founding father, John Adams. From there, the conflict between humans and vampires got bigger and weirder as more figures from American history like Adams’ wife Abigail, Thomas Jefferson, and even George Washington became embroiled in the supernatural war on Philly’s streets, but so did werewolves, witches, gods, demons, and characters from Barnes’ other creator-owned Image books like Nita Hawes’ Nightmare blog.

 

That all happened over the course of the series’ initial five arcs, and when Killadelphia returns this November for Issue #31, the series’ apocalyptic war will get even bigger. Characters from other Image books and a classic ’70s horror film will join the fight. Spawn, the Savage Dragon, and Blacula are coming to Killadelphia. CBR spoke with Barnes about his plans for his guest stars, the evolution of Killadelphia, where it’s headed, and how it’s become the flagship book of a horror universe.

 

CBR: Let’s start with the big news, which is that Spawn is becoming a player in Killadelphia when the series returns in November. How did this come about? And was bringing Spawn into the book something you always wanted to do?

 

It’s something I’ve always wanted to do. The book started as a pretty grounded book on the streets of Philadelphia. If you read Issue #1, you never would have thought that we’d be dealing with the Devil, gods, and all the stuff we eventually go to. So, once it became a fantasy book as well as a horror one, Spawn just felt like a natural fit since he’s so many different things.

 

Do Killadelphia fans who may have never read Spawn or are lapsed in their knowledge of the character need to know anything?

 

Nope. Jason Shawn Alexander has a history with Spawn. So, I think we give you a pretty good intro not only into Spawn but how he fits into the world of Killadelphia. There’s a bridge right when he’s first introduced beyond the last page of Issue #30 as to why he’s here, how he fits, and who he is.

When I first heard about Killadelphia, I knew, given the horror flavor of your work on Marvel’s Falcon series, that it would be a labor of love for you. What I didn’t know, though, was that this would be a blend of some of the other things you find fascinating; crime stories, history, and mythology. Is that what you were aiming for? And was that what Killadelphia was always going to be?

 

Big time! I always wanted a book that didn’t have limitations. There are so many books that I think sometimes define themselves by the boundaries they’re in. Killadelphia started off as a grounded book, and you’d think that’s what it would always be. But, like you said, I have so many different interests, and I wanted to play in many different spaces. Oftentimes, books that are set in a certain environment and have a cultural identity limit themselves to just having and just being this one thing. I wanted to not define this book by any one idea. It could go anywhere as long as the rules applied. I didn’t want to break rules for the sake of breaking rules. I wanted to create a world that was flexible enough that you could go to these places, and it would feel natural to what the book was. And then you come back to your reset place and go anywhere you wanted to go.

 

During a recent reread, I noticed you planted the seeds for those big developments early on with Seesaw and the book.

 

That was the purpose of him; that he would have no limitations and that he would be that person that could break the boundaries of what you think a conventional vampire story set in the city could be.Often times in real life, you see guys like Seesaw, who come from a city, who come from a lower economic idea of what certain places are, and those characters stay limited. They’re sort of the comic relief, or they’re there to talk about pain. I wanted a character who came from that area and idea, but he had absolutely no limitations. And he continued to evolve. And as he evolved, his power and self-awareness evolved. I think all of us have the ability within us to evolve if we choose to go down the darkest paths of who we are as people, and I wanted to create a character who embodied that idea. As he was growing, we were growing within the story. It speaks to the level of potential that all of us have as people.

 

Two other characters who have been with Killadelphia since the beginning and have remained mostly mortal in a supernatural world are James Sangster Jr. and his partner Jose Padilla. What can you tell us about their roles in the series moving forward now that much of the book’s vampiric cast has been killed?

 

Nita Hawes from Nita Hawes’ Nightmare Blog has sort of moved in and become part of the story as well. So between Jose, Jimmy Jr., and Nita Hawes, they’ll have their own mission of sorts that’s coming in soon with some of our other guest stars.

 

I said it on my Instagram page, but Savage Dragon and Blacula are joining us as well. That also means Dracula is joining us, too. So, they’ll have their own thing to deal with that is connected to the Blacula book I did last year.

 

So, Killadelphia is evolving. I’m really excited about this next story arc and just being able to pivot. We could come back to some of those earlier stories and ideas, but being able to have all of these guest stars forces us to tell different types of stories, go to different types of places, and elevate certain characters like Seesaw to a different level of power and influence over the universe

Guest stars may seem out of place in this book, but if you’ve been reading from the beginning, you know that Killadelphia has featured cameos from Carl Kolchak, the agents of The X-Files, and Robert Neville from I Am Legend.

 

[Laughs] Yes! You’ve got a keen eye. A lot of those folks that jumped in from the past were there because I’m a huge fanboy, and so is Jason. Here though, they’re actually part of the narrative. They play a purpose within the ongoing story that we’re trying to tell. So, I’m honored that Todd McFarlane, Eric Larsen, MGM, and all the other players were willing to let us play with these characters and put them in our world.

 

Another major player in Killadelphia has been the trickster god, Anansi, whose love for humanity means he can’t sit on the sidelines of the looming apocalyptic war. What made you want to cast Anansi in this role?

 

I first wrote Anansi on the TV show American Gods. I was a writer and producer on that show for a season. I fell in love with the character and Orlando Jones’ take on him. It was also an extension of Neil Gaiman’s work as well.

 

When you’re talking about a story that comes from the streets of Philadelphia, if you were to throw in Zeus, Odin, or some other god, they might not feel right, even though some of them have made appearances in the book as well. If you want to capture the voice of the street, but through the lens of a god who connects with these types of worshipers, why not have a god that speaks the language, so to speak?

 

 So, Anansi fit for me. I introduced Anansi in Nita Hawes’ Nightmare Blog. I thought he really fit well in that world, and if I was bringing Nita Hawes over, why not bring Anansi over as well?

 

Tituba and the Werewolves of Elysium Gardens round out the surviving original cast. What do you want readers to know about the history of these characters and your plans for them moving forward?

 

I’m a huge fan of the Universal Monsters — the Wolfman, Dracula, and Frankenstein. And I always wanted to build a world that had that idea in it, but again, from the sensibilities of what Killadelphia is.

 

So, when I presented the werewolves, they were set in the ’60s and ’70s originally. Their history dates back to North Africa when they were Moors. So, I wanted to give them a proper introduction, and I sometimes fear that they’ll get lost in the main story because sometimes, it’s so much about the other characters. I want to give them this platform because they have their own story. I want to give them more space in the stories to come. So, you’ll see them breathe a little more as we get into story arcs six and seven. They’ll have more of an emotional stake in the story.

 

What else can you tell us about the plot and action of this new arc? Spawn’s arrival and Anansi’s warning about messing with time suggest we’re in for another big escalation in terms of scope and scale.

 

That is one of the ways that our guest stars come into play. Once you play with time, you open the door to a lot of different possibilities. Those possibilities invite new dangers. So, like you said, the scale of the war that is taking place on the streets of Philadelphia will become bigger in ways that, again, if you had just read the first issue, you’d never imagine that this is where we’re going to go.

 

Another thing that I think is kind of cool about this story arc is you sometimes forget, because you’re dealing with an A-story of a war on the streets with all of these monsters, that there are people still in Philadelphia. Some are vampires and some are human, but they’re trying to survive because the whole city has been quarantined by the National Guard.

 

There’s a war happening, and no one is coming to help. So, these people have to figure out how they’ll survive. You’ll have a lot of intimate B-stories that are there about what’s going on with the people of Philadelphia that I’m really proud of. They touch on themes of hope, loss, love, and solid human stuff that you can sometimes forget when you’re dealing with a monster book.

What you’re saying also evokes apocalyptic stories like The Walking Dead where survivors are often forced to make difficult choices.


Perfect! Yes, the stories about survival and moral dilemmas that test you as a human being. Forget who you were when times were great! Now, you’re in a place where you’re fighting for your loved ones. So, how far will you go? What are the extremes?


We’ll ask a lot of questions about humanity. That’s the stuff I’ve always dug — those Twilight Zone-style stories that make you ask questions about yourself and other human beings.


Your long-time artistic collaborator Jason Shawn Alexander is still part of the Killadelphia art team with this new arc, but I’m guessing German Erramouspe is also part of the team with this arc?


He is. We’re continuing on [him] because I can write scripts in a relatively short amount of time. It takes a lot more time to illustrate said stories. Plus, Jason is doing more stuff. He’s got some fantastic stuff coming on Batman and some of his own work, like Empty Zone; which is coming back in 2024.


So, I’m blessed that he’s still a part of the book and is able to keep the art quality high and familiar. It takes A LOT to draw 3-4 books and the stuff that he hasn’t told me about and is sneaking around doing because he cheats on me. [Laughs]


[Laughs] Finally, one of the beautiful things about creator-owned comics that have found fan support, like Killadelphia, is that you get to decide when they end. You and Jason have built a pretty massive world together, and it still feels like there’s much left to explore. So, how far along are you in the long-form story of Killadelphia?


I do see an end of this main storyline coming. It’s still a little ways off. So, I’d say we’re probably about two-thirds along the way of where we’re going.


We live in a world where once you get past the first and second issues, things seem to trail off in the comic book space. It’s not like when I was a kid where we’d have 500 issues of a thing. Now, books don’t even go beyond 10-15 issues sometimes. So, we’re blessed right now that we’re in the ’30s and sixth story arc and are still able to talk about Killadelphia. I’m very grateful for that, but all good things come to some form of an end.


Some of the characters from my Substack books will be coming into Killadelphia before that end, though. We’ll have characters like zombies, and Johnny Gatlin, the gunslinging demonic cowboy. There will be all these characters that take the book in another direction as well.


So, there will always be some form of Killadelphia, but will it always be as it started off — a father and son trying to find out who was killing people on the streets of Philadelphia? No, that storyline will probably conclude at some point.


In a way, with books like Killadelphia, Nita Hawes’ Nightmare Blog, and your Substack titles, you’ve built something like the Mignolaverse. That story had its modern-day ending a few years back, but like their recent titles show, there are plenty of past stories you can go back and explore.


Exactly! And thank you! That’s a hell of a compliment, and I hope to go back and look at some of our characters because we’re dealing with a world where death isn’t death in the conventional sense. You can still go to Heaven and Hell. You can still go to places and check in on people and see where they are in the afterlife, and they can still have concerns about things. So, I’m sure we’ll see those characters again at some point, but in a book like Killadelphia that has so many characters and is so intimately approached, I never want there to be a sense of sameness.


So, when we get to a point where there’s too much of things like the father and son stuff or John and Abigail Adams bickering, I get bored. And, if I’m getting bored, I don’t want the audience to get bored. That’s why I’m bringing in elements to make the story more nimble. The ability to go here, there, and different places was always the goal.


I’m really excited about our guest stars. It’s a huge thing for us because we have our little, insulated world that we created, but being able to bring in Spawn, Savage Dragon, and Blacula gives us an opportunity to expand our world and hopefully bring in new readers and folks who are fans of those other things, while still maintaining what we do with Killadelphia. Hopefully, this will enhance the level of interest in this book.


Killadelphia #31 is due out on Nov. 15.

Screenwriter Rodney Barnes on ‘Kolchak: The Night Stalker’

Award-winning screenwriter and producer Rodney Barnes (“Everybody Hates Chris,” “Winning Time”) got hooked on genre-defying TV and film early in his life when he encountered made-for-TV films “The Night Stalker,” and “The Night Strangler” — both of which deftly combined mystery, horror, and comedy.  

 

Strong ratings for these early 1970s movies prompted ABC to order a 20-episode series called “Kolchak: The Night Stalker,” which ran from 1974-1975. Both the films and the show starred actor Darren McGavin as news reporter Carl Kolchak, whose tenacious personality and hard-driving investigations of supernatural crimes often got him in trouble at work. The series is said to be an inspiration for “The X-Files.” 

 

Barnes recently wrote the graphic novel “Blacula” and says “Kolchak: The Night Stalker”  set him on his path to write professionally.

 

More: Writer Rodney Barnes on reimagining ‘Blacula’ as a graphic novel

 

This segment has been edited for length and clarity. 

 

A television show that affected me deeply when I was a kid, that started me on my journey of loving genre, was called “Kolchak: The Night Stalker.” 

 

“The Night Stalker” and “The Night Strangler” were actually two movies of the week [by Richard Matheson]. They were so well written, and it was this crime noir, paranormal-journalist investigator who would find vampires and various stories of the supernatural and macabre. 

 

 

 

It went from a movie of the week and ultimately became a weekly series. It was also the inspiration for The-X Files from what I hear. But for me, it sparked my imagination that this was possible in some way, to have a monster of the week and have all of these different elements converge together. [It] really inspired my work to be able to have multiple voices and not just necessarily adhere to one. 

 

Everybody else said [Kolchak] was crazy to the cops. His editor, everybody would [say], “Kolchak, you’re nuts!” He would go out on the streets and be determined to find out whatever it was. And even though he was able to solve the supernatural problem, he never really benefited from it. He would get fired; he had to move on to another city. But we loved him because he was doing good work.

 

Tonally, he was able to parse that here with comedy, because it came from him as a character. The way he approached the problem was in a whimsical way, but when danger happened he was in that place of acknowledging the danger. It wasn’t something that was funny at the moment. I think tonally, it was spot on. 

 

Just love, love, love that show. It was the perfect thing to set me on a path to wanting to be a part of this community.

 

KILLADELPHIA Returns In November With Spawn, Savage Dragon, Blacula, And More

The Eisner Award-nominated Killadelphia from writer Rodney Barnes(American Gods, HBO’s Winning Time, and the record-breaking new Star Wars: The Mandalorian comic book series) and collaborator Jason Shawn Alexander, the artist who redefined Todd McFarlane’s legendary Spawn for a whole new generation, shocked fans with a surprise appearance from the same character in the final issue of the previous story arc.

The Killadelphia series follows a small-town beat cop who returns home to bury his murdered father, revered Philadelphia detective James Sangster Sr. What he doesn’t anticipate is digging up a mystery that will lead him down a path of horrors and shake his beliefs to their core. The city that was once the symbol of liberty and freedom has fallen prey to corruption, poverty, unemployment, brutality… and vampires. Now, it’s up to Jimmy and an unexpected companion to stop long-thought-dead president of the United States John Adams from building an undead army and staging a bloody new American revolution.

The forces of Heaven and Hell clash on the battleground that is Philly and weave into the tapestry of a larger universe when Todd McFarlane’s greatest creation crosses over into the pages of Killadelphia! All the power SeeSaw has gained and all the magic he’s learned will be put to the test when he faces off against comics’ greatest anti-hero! Anything can happen in this bold jumping-on point for new readers that will redefine the Killadelphia universe as we know it. The sold-out, Eisner Award-nominated series continues in a landmark story arc that will also feature canon surprise appearances by recognizable characters from outside Philadelphia’s city limits.

“It’s tough to convey how excited I am about this story arc. Big thanks to Todd McFarlane and Eric Larsen for lending us their creations” says writer and co-creator Rodney Barnes. “Also thanks to MGM studios for allowing Blacula to visit the city of Philadelphia. And lastly a humongous thanks to the late great Bram Stoker for creating Count Dracula who will be joining the battle as well. Great times!”

This next arc also contains a backup stories featuring Hell’s Baddest Badass: Johnny Gatlin.

KILLADELPHIA #30 Sells Out and Goes to a Second Printing!

The Eisner Award nominated Killadelphia from writer Rodney Barnes (American Gods, HBO’s Winning Time, and the record-breaking new Star Wars: The Mandalorian comic book series) and collaborator Jason Shawn Alexander, the artist who redefined Todd McFarlane’s legendary Spawn for a whole new generation, shocked fans with a surprise appearance from the same character on April 26.

Fans and collectors overwhelmed their local comic shops to grab this landmark issue, selling out of its first printing almost immediately. Today, Image Comics announces a second printing will arrive on sale May 31, and available for preorder now!

Rodney Barnes says “There’s so much to say about Killadelphia issue 30. First how grateful I am to the fans for supporting us in reaching thirty issues. How appreciative I am to Image comics for supporting us throughout the journey. How honored I am to work with jason and our team, and how amazed I am that the great Todd McFarlane trusted us with his legendary creation, Spawn!”

 

The Killadelphia series follows a small-town beat cop who returns home to bury his murdered father, revered Philadelphia detective James Sangster Sr. What he doesn’t anticipate is digging up a mystery that will lead him down a path of horrors and shake his beliefs to their core. The city that was once the symbol of liberty and freedom has fallen prey to corruption, poverty, unemployment, brutality… and vampires. Now, it’s up to Jimmy and an unexpected companion to stop long-thought-dead president of the United States John Adams from building an undead army and staging a bloody new American revolution.

In this latest arc, villains have become heroes, with the line between good and evil blurred beyond recognition. Philadelphia is ravaged by the war between Heaven and Hell, and our heroes are DEAD…But from the ashes of despair comes the spark of hope that will set up a bold new direction for this series…and things will never be the same. The sold-out, Eisner Award-nominated horror series reaches the end of this arc with even more shocking surprises! It all starts here!

Head to your favorite comic book retailer today to preorder your copy of this second printing!

 

Praise for Killadelphia 30:

“It is not an exaggeration that if you read just one comic this week or maybe even this year, it should be Killadelphia #30.”–ComicBook.com

“Killadelphia #30 is a fantastic ending to the arc. The previous issues set up the twist brilliantly, leaving us looking over the unexpected precipice of what happens next, because there is going to be a next and it looks marvelous. I can’t wait.”–Major Spoilers

Nominees Announced for 2023 Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards

SAN DIEGO – Comic-Con is proud to announce the nominees for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards 2023. The nominations are for works published between January 1 and December 31, 2022 and were chosen by a blue-ribbon panel of judges.

Once again, this year’s nominees in 32 categories reflect the wide range of material being published in the U.S. today in comics and graphic novels, representing some 150 print and online titles from over 50 publishers, produced by creators from all over the world.

Image and DC received the most nominations: Image with 20 (plus 6 shared) and DC with 11 (plus 5 shared). Image’s nominees span a spectrum of titles, with multiple nominations for Clementine, The Department of Truth, It’s Lonely at the Centre of the Earth, Killadelphia, Love Everlasting, Monstress, and Rain. Topping DC’s nominees are Human Target and Nightwing, with 3 each.

Best Continuing Series
  • Daredevil, by Chip Zdarsky, Marco Checchetto and Rafael de Latorre (Marvel)
  • The Department of Truth, by James Tynion IV and Martin Simmonds (Image)
  • Killadelphia, by Rodney Barnes and Jason Shawn Alexander (Image)
  • The Nice House on the Lake, by James Tynion IV and Alvaro Martinez Bueno (DC)
  • Nightwing, by Tom Taylor and Bruno Redondo (DC)
  • She-Hulk, by Rainbow Rowell, Rogê Antônio, Luca Maresca, and Takeshi Miyazawa (Marvel)

 

Spawn’s surprise Killadelphia appearance promises big changes for the vampire crime comic

Spawn

There have been many twists and turns over the course of Rodney Barnes and Jason Shawn Alexander’s supernatural crime epic, Killadelphia (remember when they revealed that several long dead US presidents are, in fact, vampires?), but arguably none quite as dramatic as the reveal at the end of this month’s issue. The final page of Killadelphia #30 sees the series crossover with another franchise in a big way, as Todd McFarlane’s Spawn makes a grand entrance.

The issue delves into the life of vampire magician SeeSaw, exploring the impact that an early experience of tragedy had on him. SeeSaw’s dabbling with the occult, however, draws the attention of some powerful entities, leading them to dispatch Spawn to clean up his mess.

Writer and creator Rodney Barnes said of the crossover, “It’s an honor to have one of the greatest characters ever created to visit our Killa-verse! I cannot thank the great Todd McFarlane for lending us his baby for a spell. We’re committed to do him justice.”

 

Artist Jason Shawn Alexander added: “I’m getting to draw the coolest stuff of my career. Spawn entering the Killaverse makes perfect sense as the series has taken on more ethereal and magic elements in the recent arcs. Fans are in for absolute horror insanity!”

This isn’t the first time that Alexander has drawn Spawn. He has a long history with The One, having been a regular artist on Image’s monthly comic.

Killadelphia began in 2019 as a seemingly straightforward crime comic about a Baltimore cop who returns home to bury his detective father. As he investigates further, however, he begins to realise that there’s a supernatural evil at work here: vampires.

Since then, the Eisner Award nominated series has – ahem – spawned a pair of spinoff titles, Johnny Gatlin and Twenty Degrees Past Rigor, which Barnes has promised will eventually crossover with the main title. For now though, the new issue looks like the start of a very exciting arc.

The cover for Killadelphia #30

Killadelphia #30 is out now from Image Comics.

Not all bloodsuckers are bad. There’s even a surprising number of vampire superheroes

Philly’s horror comic, ‘Killadelphia,’ is about a lot more than John Adams’ vampire revolution

The horror comic, Killadelphia, uses the vampire genre to explore the sins of American politics and abandonment of inner-city neighborhoods.

The horror comic, Killadelphia, uses the vampire genre to explore the sins of American politics and abandonment of inner-city neighborhoods.

Rodney Barnes’ horror comic, Killadelphia, reads like the Philly version of The Wire, except with undead Founding Fathers drenching the streets with blood.

The story begins when a small-town cop comes home to Philly to bury his estranged father, a homicide detective killed on the job. Amid the crushing violence, poverty, and corruption, the young officer discovers that something uniquely sinister preys on his hometown: John Adams, the second president of the United States, never actually died. Instead, the shambling corpse of our oft-overlooked Founding Father has been amassing a vampire army.

What follows is a history geek’s Armageddon, with first lady Abigail Adams and Thomas Jefferson — also both undead — jumping into the fray (John Adams eventually sees the light).

Beautifully illustrated by cocreator Jason Shawn Alexander — and praised by Chris Rock, Snoop Dogg, and Jordan Peele — Killadelphia uses the vampire genre to explore the sins of American politics and abandonment of inner-city neighborhoods. By drawing on his own estranged relationship with his police detective father, slavery’s painful legacy, and historical events, like the MOVE bombing, Barnes traces centuries of trauma.

“It is such a genuinely fresh take on the vampire idea … I thought that idea had had every shred of meat chewed off of its bones but Rodney found such a genuinely original take on it, and links it to the trauma America is going through right now,” said the actor and comedian Patton Oswalt, who has penned comics for Marvel and DC, and struck up a friendship with Barnes after reading Killadelphia.

In this Q & A, Barnes, who lives in Los Angeles, discusses why Philly is the backdrop of his vampire comic, the complicated baggage of the “Killadelphia” nickname, and the eventual conclusion of his acclaimed series.

John Adams leads a vampire revolution through Philly. How exactly did you land on that?

(Laughing) I’d always wanted to do a vampire graphic novel series. The primary idea was to be there at the beginning of America — that idea of America vs. America. I needed a character who could walk through time, seeing the evolution of America, and how so many people have fallen through the cracks.

In the horror comic, "Killadelphia," John Adams, second president of the United States, never actually died. Instead, the oft-overlooked Founding Father has been amassing a vampire army.
Why Adams?

I was at Hamilton, and the king was laughing at John Adams. I wondered what if John Adams was here? What would John Adams think of them making fun of John Adams?

Vampire John Adams wasn’t too thrilled?

Take death off the table, and now he’s got a do-over. He can make a better America, a freer America. That’s his first goal. But the rest of it is personal and ego. And probably him trying to impress Abigail.

Adams was not actually an immortal demon.

John Adams didn’t own slaves — and he was sort of progressive when it came to women’s rights. Abigail played a role in shaping his perspectives.

In the horror comic, "Killadelphia", John Adams, second president of the United States, never actually died. Instead, the oft-overlooked Founding Father has been amassing a vampire army.
Why Philly?

When you look at Philadelphia you see the beauty and you see the struggle. It has its own personality, it has its own rhythms, it has the concrete, and the cold. It’s in your face. It’s real.

We didn’t want to use it as a prop, like where we just show the Liberty Bell. We wanted to be able to speak to the community — to me, that’s honoring the city in a more substantive way.

“Killadelphia” is a painful nickname.

There is a negative connotation the same way there is with “Chi-Raq.” It’s not an indictment of a city. It’s an indictment of the problem. I’m focused on the problem.

The MOVE bombing is referenced. The city even drops bombs on a high-rise to kill vampires.

I could have ignored it, but it spoke directly to what the book is all about: taking historical events and putting them in context to the characters. How they experienced them as Americans — and how they move forward.

The book deals with issues like policing and institutional racism through story and character.

I try really hard not to take a position of left or right in the politics of the book. I tried to stay right down the middle and speak to either side when it needs to be spoken to, or when a character speaks to it. I think the book goes into the flaws we have as human beings.

Or the undead.

I think everyone in this story is trying to do the best they can, even the vampires.

In his horror comic, "Killadelphia," Rodney Barnes uses the vampire genre to explore the sins of American politics and abandonment of inner-city neighborhoods.
Generational trauma is explored powerfully, especially between the father and son characters, both Black policemen.

The father and son dynamic really came from my relationship with my father. It was always troubled. Once he passed, I remember thinking if we’d had more time, maybe we’d have been able to straighten our stuff out and get closer.

He was a cop?

He was one of the first Black police officers in Anne Arundel, Md. He and my mom broke up when I was really young, but I was always proud when he came around my elementary school in his police car. He just looked like a superhero.

Did he talk about the job?

I didn’t see him enough to actually get to know him as a person, but the symbol — the idea of him — loomed so large in my mind. … I remember being 7 or 8 and seeing his crime scene photos. It was a body in an alley, and there were little holes on the body. And he said, “Oh, rats had gotten to the body.” And it just stuck with a kid with an imagination like mine. I was like, “No, these are vampires.”

“Killadelphia” wraps up its fifth story arc next month. How long will the series go?

When it becomes too big and too fantastic, it’ll be time to end. I’ve always wanted to keep that personal connection, where the story is about people and hope living in the face of struggle.

The horror comic, "Killadelphia," uses the vampire genre to explore the sins of American politics and abandonment of inner-city neighborhoods.

BLACULA: RETURN OF THE KING SELLS THROUGH FIRST PRINTING

Rodney Barnes and Jason Alexander’s Original Graphic Novel Sequel to the Classic MGM Film Sells Out At Distributor

 

LOS ANGELES CA–Zombie Love Studios, the newly launched publishing home to the work of Rodney Barnes(American Gods, HBO’s Winning Time, and the record-breaking new Star Wars: The Mandalorian comic book series) released the first of its 2023 releases in January with the critically acclaimed sequel to the classic 1972 film Blacula from the team behind the hit Image Comics series Killadelphia; writer Rodney Barnes and artist Jason Shawn Alexander. Less than two months later, the first printing has sold out at Diamond, with the last remaining copies on shelves in comic shops and bookstores.

Writer and publisher Rodney Barnes says “So excited and grateful for the tremendous response folks have had for Blacula! Looking forward to the hardcover edition and the new adventures to come!”

Set in Los Angeles, two souls; one looking for vengeance and the other seeking the truth, share one thing in common; they are both searching for the legendary vampire Blacula. Tina Thomas is a reporter for the blog Dark Knights, which chronicles all things unnatural, uneasy, and undead. She meets a young man named Kross, who asked her to help him kill Blacula, after his family was forever changed by the vampire.

Blacula: Return of the King brings the same high emotional stakes storytelling fans have come to expect from the long-running vampire epic Killadelphia to the classic characher, redefining and reinventing him for a modern audience seeking thought-provoking horror in comics and beyond.

Blacula: Return of The King is now sold out at Diamond, with the last remaining copies on shelves at your favorite comic book shop, and limited stock available through Amazon and other online book retailers.

About Rodney Barnes:

Veteran award-winning screenwriter and producer Rodney Barnes has established himself as a Hollywood mainstay, with his vibrant, emphatic voice and producing expertise securing him an overall deal with HBO in September 2020. From Adult Swim’s The Boondocks to Hulu’s Wu-Tang: An American Saga, Barnes has displayed versatility across a variety of genres in the industry’s largest and most influential programs.

Barnes is currently executive producer for HBO’s series, which chronicles the professional and personal lives of the 1980s Showtime Lakers during the team’s wild and fast-paced golden years, with the original film Ride Around Sharing in development at Netflix. The second arc of his critically acclaimed graphic novel Killadelphia was released in August 2020, with a television show in development at Levantine TV, has been tapped to pen a creative feature for New Regency with Jordan Vogt-Roberts attached to direct, and is writing a miniseries based on the life of golf great Tiger Woods. As well, he has signed a two-year overall agreement to write, direct, and produce original content for HBO. He has also formed Zombie Love Studios,  a graphic novel production studio that will both adapt and create original graphic novels, beginning with a sequel to legendary cult blaxploitation film Blacula in 2023. Currently, he writes Killadelphia  and Nita Hawes Nightmare Blog for Image Comics, and publishes original content through his Dark Apocrypha Presents Substack newsletter.

About Jason Shawn Alexander:

Jason Shawn Alexander is an expressionist figurative painter, illustrator, and comic book creator. Alexander pulls from the vulnerability, fear, and underlying strength of his rural upbringing, just outside of the haunting home of the Delta Blues.

Alexander’s work has been the subject of number of solo exhibitions, including the Corey Helford Gallery, Culver City, CA, and 101/exhibit. In 2009 his portrait hung in the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC. His work is collected both in the US and abroad. Alexander has also worked over 20 years as an illustrator and comic book creator. He has earned two Eisner Award Nominations and the Silver Medal from the Society of Illustrators. He has co-created and provided art for titles at DC/Vertigo, Dark Horse Comics, and Image Comics. He’s also worked with the publishers Marvel, DC, Dark Horse, and Oni Press. He has also supplied art and storyboards for independent and short films, as well as motion comics for films like Pan’sLabyrinth and Predators.

From his first solo exhibition Insomnious at 101/exhibit in 2009, it was evident that Alexander had traced the thread and was pulling it through. A reviewer from ART NEWSwas moved to write, “Recalling Bacon’s portraits, the figures seem to cry out… Alexander’s impassioned application of oil paints underscores the barely contained violence of the visions, lingering like intimations of half-remembered dreams.”

Jason Shawn Alexander is painting and drawing in Los Angeles, CA with his wife and daughter. They also have two dogs.

The Mandalorian Season 2 adaptation coming from Marvel

As we wait eagerly for the third season of The Mandalorian to arrive on Wednesday, the second season will be getting the Marvel treatment as writer Rodney Barnes and artist Georges Jeanty return (alternating issues with Hidden Empire penciller and artist Steven Cummings) to adapt the thrilling 2020 season into 8 issues, and the newsstand cover as well as 3 variants are below to check out.

Star Wars: The Mandalorian Season 2, an eight-issue adaptation of the second season of the hit Disney+ series, is on the way. Like Marvel’s first The Mandalorian series, which concludes next week, every issue will retell the story of one episode. The Mandalorian Season 2 will begin with “Chapter 9: The Marshal,” adapting a memorable episode in which Mando encounters Marshal Cobb Vanth, setting the stage for major events to come.

Mando and Grogu aren’t the only duo coming back, however: The current creative team of writer Rodney Barnes and artist Georges Jeanty are returning for the series. While Jeanty will kick off The Mandalorian Season 2 with art for issue 1, he’ll be joined by artist Steven Cummings, fresh off the Star Wars event series Hidden Empire, who will be penciling every other issue.

 

“Adapting The Mandalorian has been a pure treat!” Barnes tells StarWars.com. “The series embodies all aspects of the Star Wars universe: the myth, the mystery, and spectacle that made me fall in love with it so long ago. It’s an honor to be part of this project!”

“I am thrilled to be able to be part of the world of The Mandalorian and get to draw some of his adventures,” adds Cummings. “The Lone Wolf and Cub via the Old West vibe of the show has me excited to pick up my pencil every day and dive in.”

SAT 3/4/23: BLACULA RETURN OF THE KING signing with creators RODNEY BARNES & JASON SHAWN ALEXANDER

Hey Third Eye Faithful!  We’ve got a signing of legendary proportions on the way this March as we celebrate the return of the horror icon, BLACULA, in the all new BLACULA: RETURN OF THE KING graphic novel with superstar creators RODNEY BARNES (KILLADELPHIA, NITA HAWES NIGHTMARE BLOG, MONARCH, THE MANDALORIAN) & JASON SHAWN ALEXANDER (KILLADELPHIA, EMPTY ZONE, SPAWN)!

We’re stoked to have Rodney & Jason joining us to not only celebrate the launch of their incredible graphic novel that brings the legendary BLACULA back into the spotlight, but also all of their other killer projects as well, including one of our personal faves at Third Eye: KILLADELPHIA!

WHAT’S THE SCOOP ON BLACULA?

BLACULA RETURN OF THE KING GN

Los Angeles-the City of Angels. Two souls, one is looking for vengeance and one is looking for the truth. They share one thing in common, they are both searching for the legendary vampire Blacula.

Tina Thomas is a reporter for the blog Dark Knights, which chronicles all things unnatural, uneasy, and undead. She meets a young man named Kross whose family was forever changed by the vampire. Kross asks Tina to help him kill Blacula. Blacula too is on a mission, he is searching for the one who forever changed his life centuries ago. His name is Count Dracula.

 

 

OTHER WORKS BY RODNEY & JASON!

KILLADELPHIA VOL 1 BY BARNES & ALEXANDER

Featuring the show-stopping talents of SPAWN series artist JASON SHAWN ALEXANDER and the writer behind such hit shows as Wu-Tang: An American Saga, Marvel’s Runaways, and STARZ’s American Gods-RODNEY BARNES.

When small-town beat cop Jimmy Sangster returns to his Philadelphia roots to bury his murdered father, he stumbles into a mystery that will lead him down a path of horrors and shake his beliefs to their core. The city that was once the symbol of liberty and freedom has fallen prey to corruption, poverty, unemployment, brutality…and vampires. There’s a reason they say you can’t go home again. Welcome to Killadelphia. Collects KILLADELPHIA #1-6.

 


NITA HAWES’ NIGHTMARE BLOG VOL 1 BY BARNES & ALEXANDER

From the team of Image’s Eisner-nominated series KILLADELPHIA comes a terrifying new horror series created by acclaimed Marvel writer Rodney Barnes and fan-favorite SPAWN artist Jason Shawn Alexander.

Untold evil lurks the streets of Baltimore, Maryland as the demon Corson surfaces from the underworld to possess a man-once-wronged… and his vengeance will come at humanity’s despair! As Gods and Demons clash, humanity’s fate hangs in the balance! But paranormal investigator Nita Haweswoman with demons of her ownset out on a quest to root out the evil from her city.

Guided by the ghost of her dead brother, she must come to terms with her own past, else she become a victim herself and join her brother in a state worse than death!

Collects NITA HAWES NIGHTMARE BLOG #1-6


STAR WARS MANDALORIAN VOL 1 BY BARNES

Din Djarin, the armored bounty hunter better known as The Mandalorian, has been a smash-hit on Disney+ for two incredible seasons. Now, at last, the Mandalorian arrives on the comics page – in the first half of an action-packed adaptation of the show’s first season!

The bounty hunter has agreed to track down a target for a mysterious ex-Imperial client who offers to pay in Beskar, a rare metal revered by Mandalorians. But when Djarin locates the target – the adorable green toddler known only as The Child – all bets are off! Will Djarin follow his Mandalorian code and turn over the Child? And if he doesn’t, what will the consequences be? Prepare for a gritty adventure through the Star Wars universe featuring mercenaries, Blurrgs, mudhorns and more! This is the way! COLLECTING: Star Wars: The Mandalorian (2022) 1-4